Travel Tales and Pictures

Travel Stories and Photographs by John.

Monday

New York City, New York - At Christmas - Part V

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Bloomingdale's decorated for Christmas.

All over Manhattan buildings were decorated for Christmas.
New York City street decorated for Christmas

Christmas lights in Manhattan


Roosevelt Island Tram

Catherine and I put in reservations for dinner at the Serendipity restaurant and had an hour to kill so we walked around the Upper East Side neighborhood. Unexpectedly we ran across the tram to Roosevelt Island. I had read about the tram some time ago and we decided we had time to ride it across and back and take in the city lights before dinner.

Roosevelt Island is a narrow island in the East River of New York City. It lies between the island of Manhattan to its west and the borough of Queens on Long Island to its east.

Although Roosevelt Island is located directly under the Queensboro Bridge, it is not directly accessible from the bridge itself.

In 1976, the Roosevelt Island Tramway was constructed to provide access to Midtown Manhattan.

Something I didn’t know until the next day was that on April 18, 2006, 67 passengers and 2 operators were trapped on both cable cars linking Manhattan to Roosevelt Island. No one was hurt but, they were stranded for over 6 hours. Sometimes it’s better to not know some things.

Roosevelt Island Tram



Serendipity restaurant

Desserts at the Serendipity restaurant


The meal was good, but the desserts were great at the Serendipity restaurant.


Serendipity restaurant

Catherine at the JFK Airport


While I was at work, Catherine picked up some sandwiches at a deli so we wouldn't have to eat airport food. Thanks Catherine.



JetBlue take us home

JFK Airport business people using the free wireless network


Our ride home

Takeoff as viewed on our electronic map on the JetBlue airplane


Watching one of my favorite TV shows "Jim Cramer's Mad Money" live on JetBlue

If you enjoyed this post, you might also enjoy previous posts Amsterdam, Netherlands or Swiss Alps - The Schilthorn, or Baden-Baden, Germany - Bavaria.

For more photos of New York, please check out my previous post: New York City, New York – Part IV.

Use the search box at the bottom of this page to find previous postings on London, Amsterdam, Japan, Germany, Austria, Yellowstone, New York, Boston, Switzerland, Alps, Plymouth Mass., Washington DC, San Francisco, Manila, San Diego or Quebec.

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New York City, New York - Christmas - Part IV

Pictures enlarge if you click on them.

Bryant Park

An outdoor ice skating ring at Bryant Park. Bryant Park is Midtown's only major green space. America's first World's Fair, the Crystal Palace Exhibition, was held here in 1853-1854.

My employer gave me the opportunity to go to New York City for a week. My wife Catherine took vacation from her job to join me and we left on a Saturday so we could enjoy the city.


The Josephine Shaw Lowell Fountain at Bryant Park

My wife recognized this fountain as the one shown on the TV series "Friends". I don't remember ever seeing the show, but later when we were at home, we watched to see if we could see the fountain and we did. Josephine Shaw Lowell is the first woman to be honored by a major monument in New York City, was the first female member of the New York State Board of Charities, serving from 1876 to 1889.


The Pond at Bryant Park



Empire State Building in red and green lights for Christmas


A scene from Bryant Park with the Empire State Building decorated for Christmas in the background.



William Cullen Bryant
Bryant worked as a lawyer in Northampton, Plainfield, and Great Barrington until 1825 when he married and moved to New York City and worked for the New York Review and then the New York Evening Post. At first an associate editor, he became editor in 1829 and remained in that post until his death. As the driving force of this liberal and literate paper, he was strongly anti-slavery.

Bryant was a lifelong political activist, initially as a proponent of the Free Soil Party, and later in life as a founder of the Republican Party. He was a fervent supporter of Abraham Lincoln's presidential bid in 1860.

Bryant died in 1878 of complications from an accidental fall. In 1884, New York City's Reservoir Square, at the intersection of 42nd Street and Sixth Avenue, was renamed Bryant Park in his honor.


Christmas lights in Manhattan


Christmas wreath in Manhattan

Reformed Protestant Dutch Church of the City of New York
The Dutch Reformed Church was organized among settlers from Holland in New York City in 1628. In 1664, the colony passed from Dutch into English hands with an approximate membership of 10,000. They were all situated in New York and neighboring states. By the terms of surrender the Dutch were granted "the liberty of their consciences in divine worship and in church discipline".




Corner store near our hotel
This is the little corner store near our hotel where we went to pick up fruit and snacks during our stay in New York City.


View of Manhattan from the Staten Island Ferry
One night we took the Staten Island Ferry from Manhattan to Staten Island just to see the skyline of New York city. There is no charge to take the ferry, so it made for a nice an inexpensive treat.



New York Stock Exchange
When we left the Staten Island Ferry, we walked through the Wall Street area headed to Greenwich Village.


Site where George Washington was sworn in as the first President of the United States


On the balcony of the Senate Chamber at Federal Hall on Wall Street. General Washington was unanimously elected President by the first Electoral College, and John Adams was elected Vice President because he received the second greatest number of votes. The new President gave his inaugural address before a joint session of the two Houses of Congress assembled inside the Senate Chamber.

Christmas decorations were in many of the buildings in Manhattan

Famous Wall Street bull

Sculptor Arturo Di Modica, who created the famous flared-nostril, 7,000-pound bull that sits in the heart of New York's financial district in lower Manhattan. The bronze sculpture is one the world's best-known symbols of American capitalism and one of the biggest tourist draws in the financial district.



Greenwich Village restaurant "Home"

Using Frommer's New York City for Dummies book, we found some great restaurants, including this tiny place in Greenwich Village simply called Home. Catherine had a signature pork chop served on a bed of homemade barbecue sauce and I had a filleted-at-your-table brook trout. Both were excellent dishes.

Greenwich Village was once a rural hamlet, entirely separate from New York, its street layout does not coincide with most of Manhattan's more formal grid plan. This has resulted in a neighborhood whose streets are dramatically different in layout from the ordered structure of other parts of town. Many of the neighborhood's streets are narrow and some curve at odd angles. Unlike most of Manhattan, streets in the Village typically are named rather than numbered. It was fun for us to just walk around the Village.



Shop window in Greenwich Village


United Nations Building

Isaiah Wall in Ralph Bunche Park
It is sometimes incorrectly stated that the famous "beat their swords into plowshares" passage from the Book of Isaiah (Isaiah 2:4) is inscribed on a wall at the U.N. headquarters building. In fact, the inscribed Isaiah Wall is in Ralph Bunche Park, a New York City municipal park across the street from the U.N.

For more photos of New York, please check out my previous post: New York City, New York – Part III.

For more information on our trip please check out: New York City, New York V.

Use the search box at the bottom of this page to find previous postings on London, Amsterdam, Japan, Germany, Austria, Yellowstone, New York, Boston, Switzerland, Alps, Plymouth Mass., Washington DC, San Francisco, Manila, San Diego or Quebec.



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